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Hitchcock in Alone for Christmas (2013)

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Hitchcock

Films to watch on BBC iPlayer right now
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Who needs Netflix and Prime? BBC iPlayer has a terrific collection of films to watch – here’s our updated list of what to watch right now (and when they’re leaving the service).

Whilst all eyes tend to be on streaming services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime when it comes to movie updates, on the quiet the BBC iPlayer service continues to play host to a limited, diverse selection of films. What’s more, a good number of them you can download to your tablet to watch on the move.

So, without further ado, welcome to the weekly updated iPlayer film list. This list will be updated every week with the test available data from the BBC, in order of how long you have left to watch (so you can prioritise your viewing pleasure)

New! – denotes all new movies this week!

Brand-new This Week: Planet of the Apes (2001), Mud,...
See full article at Film Stories
  • 7/23/2025
  • by Em McGowan
  • Film Stories
Q&a: Brendan Columbus Discusses the Snowy Scares, Occult Undercurrents, and Compelling Conflict Awaiting Readers at the Peak of Black Diamond
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"A horrifying nordic thriller that’s equal parts Hitchcock and The Wicker Man," the new comic book series Black Diamond asks readers the chilling question of how far they would go to save their own child from a sacrificial cult, making fresh tracks of terror on its trek to the peak of parental horror.

Before the first of four issues of Black Diamond hits the scare-filled slopes on September 3rd from Panick Entertainment, Daily Dead had the pleasure of catching up with writer and creator Brendan Columbus to discuss the snowy scares, occult undercurrents, and compelling conflict within the pages of his new comic book series that features artwork by Danilo Beyruth, coloring by Lee Loughridge, lettering by Saida Temafonte, a main cover by Ben Templesmith, and a Zoop cover by Shane Pierce.

You can read our full Q&a with Brendan below, and we also have a look at...
See full article at DailyDead
  • 7/22/2025
  • by Derek Anderson
  • DailyDead
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Why Alfred Hitchcock Defended Mel Brooks’ Filmmaking Talent
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Is Mel Brooks a great filmmaker?

Well, he’s directed 11 movies, some of which are considered to be all-time comedy classics — yet he generally doesn’t get much praise for his directorial skill.

People clearly love Brooks, but he tends to be recognized for his accomplishments as a writer and performer more than as the auteur who delivered the fartiest scene in cinema history.

This may not be entirely fair. In addition to the fact that directing comedy is its own unique skillset, Brooks did show off some more obvious moments of filmic grandeur over the course of his career. Part of what made Blazing Saddles work was the fact that so much of it had the look and feel of a genuine Hollywood Western.

And Young Frankenstein similarly went out of its way to evoke the style of classic Universal monster movies, complete with authentic props and black-and-white cinematography that Brooks insisted on using,...
See full article at Cracked
  • 7/22/2025
  • Cracked
15 Horror Movies With The Best Cinematography
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The definition of "cinematography" has gotten looser in recent years. Film fans love to praise the way a movie looks -- especially lately, when movies often don't look that great! -- but in certain corners of online film spaces, "great cinematography" has started to mean "you can take a screencap and it'll look cool as a desktop wallpaper." The popular X account One Perfect Shot, for example, even spawned a TV series about cinematography, but for most of its existence, it didn't actually post shots; it posted frames. A "shot" is a length of film between cuts, often involving movement and change. "Cinematography," then, is more than just a succession of aesthetically pleasing frames. It involves all of the decisions that go into how an image is actually captured -- lighting, contrast, movement, and more.

The best directors and cinematographers maintain meticulous control over their images. That becomes especially important in horror films; in here,...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 7/19/2025
  • by Eric Langberg
  • Slash Film
65 Years After Its Release, Filmmakers Julie Pacino and Joseph Kahn on Why Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Psycho’ is Still ‘Scary As F—’
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Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho” is widely regarded as one of the greatest horror movies ever made, and 65 years after its initial release, it continues to scare audiences.

“This is the first slasher,” said director Joseph Kahn, one of the panelists for the screening. “This is a straight up, a knife doesn’t penetrate, but it’s slashing on the screen in a way that you’ve never seen before.”

Kahn was speaking at the Variety 120 Screening Series presented by Barco, a summer-long program hosted by Jazz Tangcay that celebrates Variety‘s 120th anniversary by showing iconic films such as “All About Eve” and “It’s a Wonderful Life.” He was joined by filmmaker and director Julie Pacino, who described Hitchcock’s directing as “scary as fuck.”

The film stars Janet Leigh as Marion Crane, who checks into the Bates Motel after stealing $40,000 from her office. Anthony Perkins stars as Norman Bates,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 7/18/2025
  • by Jazz Tangcay and Andrew McGowan
  • Variety Film + TV
The top 7 movies to stream on HBO Max this month
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Two big box office releases just dropped, plus a few hidden gems you might’ve missed.

I’ll admit it — HBO Max has been crushing it lately when it comes to movies. Two massive theatrical releases just dropped on the platform (you’ll find them at the very top of this list), and there’s an even bigger one on the horizon: “Superman” will eventually land here too, though we’re still waiting on a date. Things are definitely looking up for HBO Max subscribers, and if you’ve been wanting a reason to dive back into its movie library, now’s the time. It all starts with these seven picks worth streaming right now.

Top 7 movies streaming on HBO Max right now:

No. 7: ‘Opus’

No. 6: ‘Cleaner’

No. 5: ‘Get Out’

No. 4: ‘Mickey 17’

No. 3: ‘Companion’

No. 2: ‘Sinners’

No. 1: ‘A Minecraft Movie’

Sign Up...
See full article at The Streamable
  • 7/17/2025
  • by Thomas Waschenfelder
  • The Streamable
Mike Leigh
Dragonfly - Richard Mowe - 19801
Mike Leigh
Mix in a dash of Mike Leigh and a sprinkling of Hitchcock suspense and you have an approximation of the atmosphere of this odd couple tale from Paul Andrew Williams who previously gave us the noir drama London To Brighton and revenge thriller Bull.

It starts off amiably enough by describing the mundane existence of 80-year-old Elsie (Brenda Blethyn almost unrecognisable from her Vera persona) and her neighbour Colleen (Birdman’s Andrea Riseborough) who offers to help after social services fall far short.

Both women share a common bond in that they have been consigned to the fringes of society yet seem to rub along - Elsie doesn’t like to make fuss, while Colleen’s precise motives remain unclear although it’s doubtful if she is purely altruistic in her intentions.

The performances of double Oscar-nominated Blethyn and Riseborough provide hypnotic accounts of their characters as two vulnerable souls...
See full article at eyeforfilm.co.uk
  • 7/16/2025
  • by Richard Mowe
  • eyeforfilm.co.uk
Shutter Island Ending Explained: Martin Scorsese’s Biggest Change Didn’t Convince Original Author of Teddy’s Fate
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Shutter Island confused the heck out of audiences when the movie was released in 2010. Helmed by director Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo, and Ben Kingsley in leading roles, Shutter Island was more than just a film. It was a mind-numbing mystery that challenged the concepts of what the human mind is capable of.

In the end, when DiCaprio’s Teddy Daniels accepts that he is Andrew Laeddis and that he murdered his wife, who drowned their three children. In the movie, DiCaprio says, “Which would be worse: To live as a monster, or to die as a good man?”. In an interview with MTV, Dennis Lehane (author of Shutter Island) revealed that that line wasn’t in the books.

If he were to say it as a statement [and not a question], then there’s no solution here but to stop the lobotomy. Because if he shows any sort of self-awareness,...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 7/15/2025
  • by Visarg Acharya
  • FandomWire
Amazon Prime Video Adds a Must-Watch Thriller Classic To Its Lineup
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Amazon Prime Video has just added a movie that many people see as one of the best thrillers ever made. The film, which also ranks as one of the top movies from the 2000s, is now available for streaming. The movie is none other than No Country for Old Men, the famous crime thriller directed by Joel and Ethan Coen.

Back in 2008, No Country for Old Men dominated the Oscars. It won four major awards at the 80th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Supporting Actor.

It was the movie that took home the most wins that night, after getting a total of eight nominations. It also beat out other popular movies like There Will Be Blood, Atonement, and Juno.

No Country for Old Men is not just an awards favorite. The movie was also a box office success. Made on a budget of $25 million,...
See full article at Comic Basics
  • 7/14/2025
  • by Hrvoje Milakovic
  • Comic Basics
Amazon Prime Video Just Added a Must-Watch Classic Thriller to Its Lineup
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Amazon Prime Video has just added a movie that many people call one of the greatest thrillers ever made. The film, which also ranks among the top movies of the 2000s, is now available for streaming. It’s called No Country for Old Men, and it’s a crime thriller directed by Joel and Ethan Coen. This movie originally came out in 2007 and was based on a novel by Cormac McCarthy.

When No Country for Old Men was first released, it was a huge hit with both critics and moviegoers. According to Rotten Tomatoes, it holds a 93% rating from critics and 86% from audiences.

On Metacritic, it has an impressive score of 92 out of 100, showing that it was loved almost everywhere. The movie went on to win four Oscars at the 80th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Supporting Actor. It also had eight nominations in total,...
See full article at Fiction Horizon
  • 7/14/2025
  • by Valentina Kraljik
  • Fiction Horizon
The One Movie That Director Alfred Hitchcock Couldn't Complete
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The legendary Alfred Hitchcock is one of the most revered filmmakers of all time. Hitchcock crafted some of the most iconic scenes in cinema history, including the dramatic crop duster chase in "North by Northwest" and the chilling shower murder in "Psycho." Beginning his career in the early days of cinema, without a wealth of cinematic classics to look to for inspiration, Hitchcock was a pioneer. He developed new narrative techniques to tell stories on film, paving the way for generations of filmmakers to follow.

Hitchcock's film career spanned over half a century. Some of his first roles in the industry were as a title designer or an art director on other filmmakers' movies, many of which have since been lost. The earliest movie actually directed by Hitchcock that modern audiences can still enjoy is 1925's "The Pleasure Garden," a silent drama based around the Pleasure Garden Theatre in London.
See full article at Slash Film
  • 7/13/2025
  • by Andrew Gladman
  • Slash Film
Matt Damon's Early Western Flop Found A Fan In Quentin Tarantino
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There are few interview subjects more candid, unpredictable, and downright entertaining than Quentin Tarantino. As far as filmmakers go, he exists on a saltily rarified plane with trash-talker supreme Orson Welles. He can be dishy, prickly and outrageously cocky, but as arguably the most influential filmmaker of his generation, he's at least earned the right to sound off on all things cinematic. And while I don't always agree with him, I appreciate that his opinions are coming from a fiercely sincere and deeply knowledgeable place.

While I enjoy Tarantino's brashness, I think he's at his very best when he goes to the mat for underappreciated film artists. Soon after he broke through with "Reservoir Dogs" in 1992 and established himself as an outspoken cinephile, he championed the films of Brian De Palma. This was not exactly an opportune time to sing the director's praises, as he'd just hit the skids...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 7/12/2025
  • by Jeremy Smith
  • Slash Film
Mike Leigh
Dragonfly - Amber Wilkinson - 19796
Mike Leigh
Mix in a dash of Mike Leigh and a sprinkling of Hitchcock suspense and you have an approximation of the atmosphere of this odd couple tale from Paul Andrew Williams who previously gave us the noir drama London To Brighton and revenge thriller Bull.

It starts off amiably enough by describing the mundane existence of 80-year-old Elsie (Brenda Blethyn almost unrecognisable from her Vera persona) and her neighbour Colleen (Birdman’s Andrea Riseborough) who offers to help after social services fall far short.

Both women share a common bond in that they have been consigned to the fringes of society yet seem to rub along - Elsie doesn’t like to make fuss, while Colleen’s precise motives remain unclear although it’s doubtful if she is purely altruistic in her intentions.

The performances of double Oscar-nominated Blethyn and Riseborough provide hypnotic accounts of their characters as two vulnerable souls on the edge -.
See full article at eyeforfilm.co.uk
  • 7/10/2025
  • by Amber Wilkinson
  • eyeforfilm.co.uk
The idea of the times by Anne-Katrin Titze
Wilhelm Sasnal
Wilhelm Sasnal on food in Robert Walser’s 1908 novel: “ I was actually struck by the first scene with the food when I was reading this.”

In the second installment with Wilhelm Sasnal, co-director with Anka Sasnal of The Assistant (Czlowiek Do Wszystkiego), a highlight of the 54th edition of Film at Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art’s New Directors/New Films, we discuss how Robert Walser’s novel employs food as security and weapon, costume design and nail polish inspired by cars, and the meaning behind the kids on their bikes dragging cans. A special Polish comic book, his exhibition Painting as Prop at the Stedelijk Museum and what he painted for the film, Hitchcock’s use of artworks, Thomas Bernhard’s Frost and Francis Bacon also came up, as well as his love for the work of Bruno Dumont.

Wilhelm Sasnal with Anne-Katrin Titze on the...
See full article at eyeforfilm.co.uk
  • 7/9/2025
  • by Anne-Katrin Titze
  • eyeforfilm.co.uk
Ryan Murphy’s ‘Monster’ Season 4 Will Follow Lizzie Borden
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Ryan Murphy and Netflix are in the process of developing a fourth installment of “Monster” that will follow Lizzie Borden, according to media reports.

The new season of the true crime anthology series will turn its attention to Borden, a woman who was tried and acquitted of the axe murders of her mother and father in 1892, though no one else was ever charged in the murders.

While “Monster” remains without a Season 4 renewal, the show is aiming for a potential shoot in the fall, with casting currently underway, per reports. Netflix declined to comment on this story.

The news comes ahead of the premiere of “Monster” Season 3, which centers on notorious 1950s grave robber, murderer and suspected serial killer Ed Gein, who served as inspiration for Norman Bates, the central character in Hitchcock’s classic 1960 film “Psycho.”

Charlie Hunnam stars as Gein, while Laurie Metcalf plays Gein’s mother Augusta,...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 7/8/2025
  • by Loree Seitz
  • The Wrap
Nicholas Alexander Chavez and Cooper Koch in Monsters (2022)
Monster season 4 might tell the story of Lizzie Borden
Nicholas Alexander Chavez and Cooper Koch in Monsters (2022)
The ten-episode series Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story (read our review Here) was such a huge success for the Netflix streaming service back in 2022 that Netflix ordered two more seasons of the show from its creators, Ian Brennan and American Horror Story co-creator Ryan Murphy. Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story was released less than a year ago, and has had quite an impact on the real lives of the title characters. Right before that season premiered last September, it was announced that Sons of Anarchy‘s Charlie Hunnam had signed on to play murderer and graverobber Ed Gein in Monster season 3 (which is apparently called The Original Monster). Although that season doesn’t have a premiere date, it’s expected to be streaming by the end of the year. Now, Variety hears that Monster season 4 is already in the works, even though no official season 4 renewal has been announced,...
See full article at JoBlo.com
  • 7/8/2025
  • by Cody Hamman
  • JoBlo.com
Brooklyn Nine-Nine's Andy Samberg Remembers 'Good Person' Andre Braugher
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Andy Samberg and Andre Braugher formed a great comedy partnership on Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Braugher shockingly passed away in 2023, and now Samberg is sharing his memories of working with Braugher.

Samberg spoke about his relationship with Braugher with other comedians. He made the comments on Amy Poehler's Good Hang podcast, via Entertainment Weekly. Poehler said of Braugher, "I never had the pleasure of meeting him, he seemed like he was just playful and fun,” to which Samberg answered, “He was, and just a good person," before going more in-depth.

Braugher played Captain Raymond Holt, a police captain who takes Samberg's Jake Peralta under his wing and forms an almost father-son-like relationship with him. Samberg described him to Poehler as “so deeply moral and kind and pleasant and smart,” before saying, “We all absolutely loved him. I miss him a lot.”

Brooklyn Nine-Nine had a memorable cast. In addition to Samberg,...
See full article at CBR
  • 7/8/2025
  • by Sarah Barrett
  • CBR
'Monster Season 4' Will Feature Lizzie Borden's Infamous Axe Murders on Netflix
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Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan's Monster Season 3 has yet to land on Netflix, but we're already learning what we can expect from the fourth season of the popular anthology series. According to Nexus Point News, production for Monster Season 4 is set to begin this Fall, with that installment reportedly focusing on the infamous Lizzie Borden murders.

The Lizzie Borden murders refer to the infamous axe slayings of Andrew and Abby Borden that occurred in 1982 in Fall River, Massachusetts. Andrew was Lizzie's father, and was found brutally murdered in the downstairs of their home, while his wife, and Lizzie's stepmother, Abby, was found upstairs. Lizzie became the main suspect and was tried for the homicides, but was acquitted of the crimes by a jury. Though she was found not guilty, many thought she was responsible for the murders, on account of her reportedly attempting to purchase poison the day before...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 7/8/2025
  • by Patricia Abaroa
  • MovieWeb
Escape Artist: Ted Kotcheff, 1931–2025
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First Blood.In 1983, Ted Kotcheff attended the Brussels Film Festival as a guest of honor; he was also there to promote the first Rambo movie, First Blood (1982), which would be the biggest commercial success of his directorial career. First Blood had originally been set for production in the early 1970s but was put through the developmental wringer for the better part of a decade, with a revolving door of potential leading men, attached directors, and multiple revisions of its survival-thriller plotline. It was an odd project for Kotcheff, then best known for the barbed social satire of Fun with Dick and Jane (1977) and North Dallas Forty (1979), broad, vulgar comedies that dealt with class warfare by means other than armed combat. “Freud says that guns are an extension of your dick,” scoffs Nick Nolte’s battered wide receiver Phil Elliott in North Dallas Forty, mocking the hardened gridiron ideal he’s...
See full article at MUBI
  • 7/7/2025
  • MUBI
Three US cinema chains up pre-movie ads to 30 minutes
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AMC, Regal and Cinemark in the US are running pre-film adverts and shows that are adding 30 minutes to the start time of a movie.

There’s a fair amount of grumbling in the cinema exhibition industry at how three different American cinema chains are dealing with challenges to ad revenues. Keen to cement the money that comes in via pre-movie advertising, AMC, Regal and Cinemark have all moved towards a 30 minute difference between the advertised start time of a movie and, well, its start time.

That’s the three biggest multiplex chains in America who are giving themselves the wiggle room for more commercials ahead of a film beginning.

I’m in the UK, so was unaware that the chains also run a ten minute pre-show called Noovie. The combination of that, trailers, and advertising? It’s adding half an hour to the running time of a cinema trip.

There...
See full article at Film Stories
  • 7/7/2025
  • by Simon Brew
  • Film Stories
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Abbas-Mustan’s Murder Mystery Humraaz Clocks 23 Years
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Subhash K Jha revisits the murder mystery Humraaz, an Abbas-Mustan directed film starring Bobby Deol, Akshaye Khanna, and Amisha Patel that released in 2002.

How can we forget Alfred Hitchcock’s Dial M For Murder about a husband who hires a charlatan to bump off his wife, when Andrew Davis recently remade the film as A Perfect Murder? Now Abbas-Mustan, the Indian purveyors of slick, intelligent thrillers, give a revivified interpretation to the classic murder thriller .

Humraaz is a gripping Hitch-cock-tale. While the Hollywood films were only about greed and other sleazy motivations Abbas-Mustan add a dash of traditional Indian values to the original when the wife, initially in collusion with her lover to betray her husband, begins to grow progressively conscious of her spousal duties. This is where the film begins to resemble Raghunath Jhalani’s 1978 marital drama Badalte Rishtey where Reena Roy married Jeetendra for his riches but soon...
See full article at Bollyspice
  • 7/5/2025
  • by Subhash K Jha
  • Bollyspice
Steven Spielberg's First Sci-Fi Movie Ever Is Impossible To Watch Today
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Whether it be a Palme d'Or, an Academy Award, or even an induction into the Criterion Collection, there are all sorts of honors that can be bestowed upon a popular filmmaker. One of the smaller, yet significant, ones is your last name becoming a lexicon among the general public. Hitchcock, Kubrick, Lynch, Scorsese, Wachowski, and Kurosawa (take your pick) are but a few of many names that immediately conjure images of their cinematic trademarks. In terms of instant recognizability, few hold the industry-wide prestige of Steven Spielberg. The influential filmmaker is not only responsible in forming the template of contemporary blockbusters countless times over ("Jaws"), but has ingrained himself into all sectors of the entertainment industry. But of course, it takes time to achieve that kind of notoriety.

Spielberg had to do what just about every other aspiring filmmaker went through, and he built his credibility from the ground up.
See full article at Slash Film
  • 7/5/2025
  • by Quinn Bilodeau
  • Slash Film
The B-Side Ep. 165 – Mission: Impossible
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Welcome to The B-Side! Here we sometimes talk about movie stars! We sometimes talk about movie directors! Today, we talk about both! Specifically, the B-Sides of the Mission: Impossible franchise.

It’s just Conor and I today folks, waxing poetic on Tom Cruise’s legendary franchise and the B-Sides that we were inspired to discuss. We’ve chosen one for each of the Mission movies. It’s also July 3rd on the day this episode is published, so happy 63rd birthday Tom Cruise!

For the first Mission: Impossible, we speak on The Avengers from 1998. An adaptation of the popular British television series from the ‘60s, director Jeremiah S. Chechik’s film was dismantled in post-production, slashed to ribbons following bad test screenings. The final product runs well under ninety minutes and is hard to understand. It sits on the other end of blockbusters in the ‘90s adapted from hit televisions from yesteryear.
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 7/3/2025
  • by Dan Mecca
  • The Film Stage
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Riz Ahmed & Lily James in 'Relay' Corporate Corruption Thriller Trailer
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"Has it ever gone wrong?" "Sometimes we have to walk away..." Bleecker Street has unveiled the trailer for a movie called Relay, a clever thriller from filmmaker David Mackenzie. This first premiered at last year's Toronto Film Festival to mixed reviews, and it just played at this year's Tribeca Film Festival as well. A world-class "fixer" is enlisted by an alluring, unpredictable whistleblower in a "twisty, confident homage to classic paranoid thrillers". A broker of lucrative payoffs between corrupt corporations and the individuals who threaten them breaks his own rules when a new client seeks his protection to stay alive. TIFF says the film is "riddled with ingenious feats of misdirection, novel set pieces, and jaw-dropping twists that would have made Hitchcock proud." Starring Riz Ahmed & Lily James, along with Sam Worthington, Willa Fitzgerald, Matthew Maher, Mike Holt, and Eisa Davis. The film currently has 81% on Rt, and looks intriguing enough to watch.
See full article at firstshowing.net
  • 7/2/2025
  • by Alex Billington
  • firstshowing.net
New Cardi B Album Announcement Pays Tribute To Iconic 62-Year-Old Horror Movie
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Rap artist Cardi B, the highest-certified female rapper in the USA, has released the long-anticipated announcement video for her sophomore studio album! Aftera string of hit singles between now and 2018, when her first album, Invasion of Privacy, came out, the rapper is releasing a new album, Am I the Drama? in 2025.

Cardi B took to X to announce the box set of her new album on July 1, explaining that they will arrive with signatures from her, and can be ordered from her website. However, the most exciting part of the Am I the Drama? announcement is in the video, which references an iconic 62-year-old horror movie by one of the genre's greatest filmmakers.

Am I The Drama? - September 19thNew box sets are available at https://t.co/RHbWupVvl1. Keep in mind these will be signed by me, with my magical left hand. Make sure yall get them while theyâ...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 7/2/2025
  • by Atreyo Palit
  • ScreenRant
‘Tales of the Unexpected’ – 10 Twisted Episodes to Watch from the Classic Anthology Series
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When it comes to TV anthologies, one of the longer show runs belongs to none other than Tales of the Unexpected, a British series that lasted from 1979 to 1988, and amassed over 100 episodes. And while first conceived as a vehicle for author Roald Dahl’s body of work, eventually other writers and original stories entered the picture. No matter who was behind the wheel, though, this anthology always provided a twist in the tail.

As the title implies, Tales of the Unexpected aspired to surprise its audience. Each episode ended with a glaring turn of events, but not every one of them was shocking. These ten episodes, on the other hand, are a cut above the rest in how twisted they turned out.

The Man from the South (1979)

Image: Michael Ontkean and Jose Ferrer in The Man from the South.

The series started off with a bang. After first being adapted...
See full article at bloody-disgusting.com
  • 7/1/2025
  • by Paul Lê
  • bloody-disgusting.com
The Batman Fans Need To Watch The Director's Horror Masterpiece While They Wait For The Sequel
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When I watch "The Batman," I never want it to end. Even three hours isn't enough time in this world, and the spin-off show "The Penguin" could only tide me over so much. Even "The Penguin" setting the stage for "The Batman Part II" is bittersweet because that sequel remains years away.

Matt Reeves' "The Batman Part II" has been delayed several times. The movie is currently set to open October 1, 2027, but DC Studios co-chief James Gunn told Entertainment Weekly that he hadn't seen Reeves' script as of the end of March 2025.

It's easy to feel cynical right now. On top of these delays, Gunn is reimagining the DC Universe on film and it's difficult to see Reeves and actor Robert Pattinson's Batman fitting into that. DC Studios has even announced a different Batman movie, "The Brave and the Bold," featuring Bruce Wayne and his son Damian/Robin.

But...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 7/1/2025
  • by Devin Meenan
  • Slash Film
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Artful Desire: Sex, Style, and Scandal in Luca Guadagnino’s Films
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A Relentless Output, A Personal Turn Since ‘Call Me By Your Name’ in 2017, Luca Guadagnino has quietly become one of the most consistently productive auteurs working today. He’s not quite working on a clock- but it’s close. With near-annual feature releases, plus the occasional short film or music video nestled in between, Guadagnino’s output is beginning to resemble Woody Allen’s in terms of consistency- that is, if Guadagnino can keep the pace up for another forty-something years. This year continues the streak. After releasing what he has called his most personal project yet, ‘Queer’ (now streaming on HBO Max), Guadagnino already has another film on deck. ‘After the Hunt,’ a psychological drama is set for release this October, starring Julia Roberts and Andrew Garfield, as well as two Guadagnino alums- Chloë Sevigny (‘Bones and All’) and Michael Stuhlbarg (‘Call Me By Your Name’). Luca Guadagnino’s...
See full article at Hollywood Insider - Substance & Meaningful Entertainment
  • 6/30/2025
  • by Joseph Tralongo
  • Hollywood Insider - Substance & Meaningful Entertainment
Van Sant’s ‘Psycho’ Never Justifies Its Decision to Impersonate Hitchcock [Revenge of the Remakes]
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Alfred Hitchcock’s influence over the horror genre is towering. “Hitchcockian” is one of the few namesake descriptors used to describe (typically lesser) copycats. Film courses teach Hitchcock’s catalog as epitomic examples of tension, mystery, and suspense, while filmmakers worship Hitchcock through tributes and facsimiles. Anyone would kill to have a Rope or Vertigo on their resume, but few will—even if they attempt a shot-for-shot remake.

Enter Gus Van Sant, hot off the success of 1997’s Good Will Hunting. Van Sant’s adoration of Hitchcock is well-documented, as well as his desire to remake Psycho with zero alterations. “It’s a marketing scheme,” Van Sant once answered in response to why Universal would greenlight his remake, continuing, “because they have this little thing they’ve forgotten about that they could put in the marketplace and make money from.” It’s hardly what I’d want to hear from...
See full article at bloody-disgusting.com
  • 6/27/2025
  • by Matt Donato
  • bloody-disgusting.com
NYC Weekend Watch: In the Mood for Love 2001, 35 Shots of Rum, Ripoffs & More
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NYC Weekend Watch is our weekly round-up of repertory offerings.

Film at Lincoln Center

In the Mood for Love and its never-before-seen epilogue In the Mood for Love 2001 begin playing while a restoration of Christiane F. continues.

Museum of Modern Art

A Theater Near You includes films by Spike Lee, Jim Jarmusch, Claire Denis, and more.

Brooklyn Academy of Music

Remakes, Ripoffs & Reinterpretations begins.

Anthology Film Archives

A survey of Jean-Claude Rousseau, including Ruggles of Red Gap on 35mm, begins; a J. Hoberman-curated series on New York avant-garde continues.

Roxy Cinema

Jupiter Ascending and Wigstock: The Movie screen on 35mm, while Carny shows on 16mm this Sunday.

Museum of the Moving Image

Pursuant to the question of our time––is Tom Cruise evil?––a career-spanning retrospective continues with The Color of Money on 35mm; Blade Runner 2049 and Fleshpot on 42nd Street screen Saturday.

Film Forum

Apocalypse Now‘s “roadshow edition” continues screening,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 6/27/2025
  • by Nick Newman
  • The Film Stage
Kin Shriner’s “For The Birds” Video Sparks Buzz Among General Hospital Fans
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General Hospital spoilers and updates reveal Kin Shriner’s (Scott Baldwin) latest social media video is for the birds—well, sort of! We’re not referring to quality problems or subject matter, we’re referring to it winding up as a tribute to the classic Alfred Hitchcock movie “The Birds” starring Tippi Hedren.

“The Birds” Debuted When Kin Was A Little Boy In Elementary School

“The Birds” debuted when Kin was a little boy in elementary school, but anyone who follows him on social media knows he’s really into old movies.

As a matter of fact, that movie has another tie to soaps-Darlene Conley, The Bold and The Beautiful’s original Sally Spectra played a part in the movie.

Kin is fond of using a filter on his camera that makes the finished project look like an old, black and white, out of focus and shaky movie.

The...
See full article at Soap Opera Spy
  • 6/26/2025
  • by Rita Ryan
  • Soap Opera Spy
Mel Brooks, Bill Pullman, John Candy, Rick Moranis, and Daphne Zuniga in Spaceballs (1987)
Mel Brooks turns 99: the comedy icon’s best films – ranked!
Mel Brooks, Bill Pullman, John Candy, Rick Moranis, and Daphne Zuniga in Spaceballs (1987)
Following the announcement of a sequel to Spaceballs, we assess the film-maker’s funniest movies, from the Hitchcock spoof High Anxiety to the impeccable Young Frankenstein

“It’s good to be the king.” Brooks mixes sight gags, dad jokes and Borscht Belt standup in historical vignettes from the stone age to the French Revolution. Results are hit and miss, and the ancient Rome segment goes on for ever, but the tasteless Torquemada musical number is a scream.
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 6/26/2025
  • by Anne Billson
  • The Guardian - Film News
I Was Today Years Old When I Caught the Alfred Hitchcock Nod Hiding In Netflix’s Wednesday
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Netflix’s Wednesday has captivated audiences with its gothic aesthetics and cinematic influences, but one Easter egg apparently flew under the radar. The hit show reportedly hides a subtle Alfred Hitchcock tribute in Principal Larissa Weems’ (Gwendoline Christie) fashion, as costume designer Colleen Atwood confirmed.

Revealing that Principal Larissa Weems’ look is a direct nod to Alfred Hitchcock’s classic, The Birds (1963), she decorated Weems’ wardrobe after finding a vintage poster of Tippi Hedren. Her choice, inspired by the Hitchcock classic, aligned with Weems’ misfit identity, symbolizing her authority and isolation, yet enhancing the series’ overall appeal.

Alfred Hitchcock’s Inspiration Behind Larissa Weems’ Fashion Gwendoline Christie as Larissa Weems from Wednesday | Credits: Netflix

Wednesday is more than just a gothic-esque TV show, for apart from its storytelling and unmissable Tim Burton aesthetic, it is also a fashion runway in its own crude sense. However, the series also carried a...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 6/25/2025
  • by Maria Sultan
  • FandomWire
From Gh to Hitchcock: Kin Shriner’s Unexpected Tribute to The Birds
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General Hospital fans have been scratching their heads, wondering where Scotty Baldwin has been. They weren’t too happy when Kin Shriner hinted that the door was closed on him. But, whatever his status is on the show, the actor never stops entertaining his fans. He recently turned a gripe into comedy gold disguised as an homage to Old Hollywood on social media, and his followers couldn’t stop laughing.

It’s Like a Horror Movie

On X, formerly Twitter, Shriner wrote, “The Birds. Hitchcock was right to make [the] movie.” What he was going on about was illustrated in a video he shared. The actor used his favorite filter on the clip that made it look like old, worn-out film. He panned across his car and stated, “I’m like Rod Taylor. The Birds. It’s every day.”

The birds Hitchcock was right to make movie . pic.twitter.com/rhb...
See full article at Soap Hub
  • 6/24/2025
  • by Roger Froilan
  • Soap Hub
The Sci-Fi Flop That Keanu Reeves Couldn't Believe He Made
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In Andrew Davis' 1996 thriller "Chain Reaction," Keanu Reeves plays Eddie Kasalivich, a machinist at the University of Chicago who is overseeing a special scientific experiment to turn hydrogen into energy. Eddie isn't a genius, but he knows how the water-filled chain reaction chamber works. Then, one night, he accidentally discovers an obscure sound frequency that stabilizes the experiment and gets it to succeed. It seems that the world's energy supply issues are going to be solved.

Of course, this immediately kicks off a shadowy cover-up wherein the chain reaction chamber is blown up by unknown conspirators and Eddie is framed for the destruction. (The explosion takes out eight full city blocks.) Innocent scientists are killed, so Eddie has to go on the run with a physicist named Lily, played by Reeves at-the-time-future "Constantine" co-star Rachel Weisz. Naturally, they must find a way to prove their innocence and discover who would...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 6/23/2025
  • by Witney Seibold
  • Slash Film
Jaws: Steven Spielberg’s “Fish Movie” Made Alfred Hitchcock Refuse a Meeting With Him
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Steven Spielberg was gaining swift recognition in Hollywood back in the 1970s, especially after Jaws made waves of money in theaters with a great box office collection.

During the same time, veteran director Alfred Hitchcock was wrapping up his legacy in 1976 (Jaws was released in 1975). Despite both directors being there at the same time, Spielberg and Hitchcock never had a chance to meet each other. Well, it was Alfred Hitchcock who refused to meet Spielberg because of his “fish movie”.

Why Alfred Hitchcock hated Steven Spielberg’s ‘Jaws’ to even grant a meeting

Well, it wasn’t so much that Jaws was the reason why Alfred Hitchcock refused to meet Steven Spielberg, but it was the director himself. Hitchcock had famously lent his voice to Universal Studios’ Jaws theme park for a deal of $1 million, but in doing so, he felt like a… s*x worker.

Steven Spielberg during an award ceremony | Credits: Gage Skidmore,...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 6/22/2025
  • by Visarg Acharya
  • FandomWire
Dermot Mulroney, Courteney Cox, Hayden Panettiere, Tony Revolori, Liana Liberato, Josh Segarra, Mason Gooding, Samara Weaving, Melissa Barrera, Jenna Ortega, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Jack Champion, and Devyn Nekoda in Scream VI (2023)
10 Must-Watch Serial Killer Movies on Netflix To Stream
Dermot Mulroney, Courteney Cox, Hayden Panettiere, Tony Revolori, Liana Liberato, Josh Segarra, Mason Gooding, Samara Weaving, Melissa Barrera, Jenna Ortega, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Jack Champion, and Devyn Nekoda in Scream VI (2023)
Serial killers in cinema have always terrified us, not just for their brutality, but for how they reflect the darkest corners of human psychology. Whether inspired by real-life figures or invented entirely in fiction, these films and series use murder not merely as a plot but as a lens to explore obsession, guilt, charisma, and fear. From the masked mayhem of Scream VI to the icy restraint of Watcher, this movie list gathers titles currently streaming on Netflix that dig into the minds of serial killers — and those who survive them. These aren’t just slashers; they’re portraits of violence and its ripple effects.

1. Scream VI (2023)

Scream VI stretches the meta-slasher franchise into bloodier, bolder terrain by taking the Ghostface killings to New York City. This time, it’s not just the violence but the legacy that haunts. The film leans into generational trauma, genre awareness, and urban anonymity...
See full article at High on Films
  • 6/20/2025
  • by Naveed Zahir
  • High on Films
The 15 Best Movies On Tubi Right Now
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You may or may not know this, but Tubi is an amazing streaming service. Sure, it's ad-supported, meaning you'll get a couple of commercial breaks during viewing, and no one's championing Tubi Originals. But no other streamer has a library as eclectic — mixing classic cinema, foreign films, studio hits, cult genre junk, horror favorites, and more. Where else can you find "The Red Shoes" next to something called "Dinocroc vs. Supergator"?

Tubi is like the niches of every other streaming service rolled into one, and it regularly hosts some of the greatest American and world cinema — for free, aside from the occasional ad break. Keep your Netflixes, HBO Maxes, and Criterion Channels — if I could only have one, I'm keeping Tubi.

Here are the 15 best movies on Tubi right now.

Read more: The 10 Best Movies Of All Time, According To IMDb

Jaws

There's a lot to say — and that has...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 6/20/2025
  • by Trace Sauveur
  • Slash Film
NYC Weekend Watch: Almayer’s Folly, J. Hoberman, Tom Cruise & More
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NYC Weekend Watch is our weekly round-up of repertory offerings.

Museum of Modern Art

A Theater Near You includes films by Chantal Akerman, Bertolucci, Aldrich, and more.

Anthology Film Archives

A J. Hoberman-curated series on New York avant-garde begins.

Roxy Cinema

Barry Lyndon and Fassbinder’s Chinese Roulette screen on 35mm.

Museum of the Moving Image

Pursuant to the question of our time––is Tom Cruise evil?––a new, career-spanning retrospective gets underway; The Muppets Take Manhattan plays this weekend.

Film Forum

Apocalypse Now‘s “roadshow edition” begins screening; the 4K restoration of Shall We Dance?, debuting Masayuki Suo’s cut, continues; The Wiz plays on Sunday.

Film at Lincoln Center

A survey of Jordan Peele’s Us, featuring films by Orson Welles, Jan Švankmajer, and Robert Zemeckis, begins, while a restoration of Christiane F. starts.

Paris Theater

The career-spanning Hitchcock series continues.

IFC Center

Ran continues in a 40th-anniversary restoration; Dogtooth,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 6/19/2025
  • by Nick Newman
  • The Film Stage
Liv Tyler and Kip Weeks in The Strangers (2008)
‘The Stranger In My Home’ Exclusive Clip: Why Are You Doing This To Me??
Liv Tyler and Kip Weeks in The Strangers (2008)
Home invasion horror is some of the scariest around because more often than not, the violence is seemingly random. Think The Strangers and other films of that ilk. Now, in the new film The Stranger In My Home, director Jeff Fisher and writer Chris Sivertson craft their own home invasion tale. But here, our stranger has plenty of secrets.

Read the full synopsis:

Ali and her daughter Katie have a perfect life—until a stranger claims to be Katie’s father. As secrets unravel, his obsession turns dangerous, pulling them into a web of lies and fear. Based on the bestselling novel by Adele Parks.

In our exclusive clip from the film, Katie wakes disoriented and trapped in an unfamiliar place. Desperate to escape her unknown captor, she frantically searches for a way out.

Watch now: Fisher said about this scene,

“In general, our goal was to try and ape...
See full article at DreadCentral.com
  • 6/18/2025
  • by Mary Beth McAndrews
  • DreadCentral.com
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‘Dragonfly’ Review: Andrea Riseborough and Brenda Blethyn Dazzle in a Bleak British Shocker
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It’s always risky to mix genres, but some movies pull off the trick with more skill than others. Dragonfly, which had its world premiere this week in Tribeca, starts as an intimate character drama, with two Oscar-nominated British actresses — Brenda Blethyn and Andrea Riseborough — at the top of their game. (They were given a joint acting award by one of the juries at the festival.) Paul Andrew Williams’ movie unfolds at a fairly leisurely but rewarding pace until an event occurs that unhinges one of the characters and turns the movie closer to the horror genre, with a blood-splattered finale. Reactions will surely be mixed about this surprise tonal shift, but there is no doubt that the film sticks in the memory.

Blethyn plays Elsie, an elderly woman living in a drab housing complex and tended to by caregivers who do the bare minimum to meet her needs. Her...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 6/18/2025
  • by Stephen Farber
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
IFC Center’s General Manager Picks Favorite Moments from 20 Years in New York City
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IFC Center turns 20 this week, and we’re celebrating by turning the clock back to 2005. On our actual birthday, June 17, a special one-day-only anniversary event showcases the four movies that played our opening week – “I Was Born But…,” “Maniac,” “Don’t Look Back,” and “Me and You and Everyone We Know” — all at 2005 prices. Later in the summer, a “20 Films for 20 Years” series will spotlight some key films from IFC Center’s history, with a different movie representing each year we’ve been open.

To mark the anniversary, IndieWire asked me to reflect on some of my personal programming highlights from almost two decades at the theater. There are dozens and dozens, but here are some of the ones that really stick out for me, in roughly chronological order:

David Lynch Introducing “Vertigo”

A few days before we opened what would be his final feature, “Inland Empire,” in December, 2006, Lynch...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 6/17/2025
  • by Harris Dew
  • Indiewire
The Brilliant Jaws Moment Steven Spielberg Borrowed From Alfred Hitchcock
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Steven Spielberg's "Jaws" should be shown to children early in their development. Get them at three or four, before their attention span has been destroyed by an onslaught of screens and other stimuli. Park them in front of good-sized television and let Spielberg's perfectly calibrated mix of adventure and terror overwhelm their senses. Implant that primal fear of getting dragged underwater by a kid-eating Great White Shark, and, once it's all over, after they've slept on it (and experienced the same briny nightmares you endure to this day), tell them that sharks are awesome creatures, actually, that are getting squeezed out of their natural habitats by the worst monsters on the planet: human beings. So when they do choose to feed on us, when we stray onto their turf, they're doing so out of necessity, not preference.

A child's first viewing of "Jaws" is a sacred thing for many reasons,...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 6/17/2025
  • by Jeremy Smith
  • Slash Film
Alfred Hitchcock Collections from Australia’s Imprint Films Bring 16 Films & More to Blu-ray
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Australia’s Imprint Films will release four limited edition Alfred Hitchcock Blu-ray collections — totaling 16 films plus a season of television — on August 27.

The Hitchcock Nine (1925-1929) collects the filmmaker’s nine surviving silent movies: The Pleasure Garden, The Lodger, The Ring, Downhill, The Farmer’s Wife, Easy Virtue, Champagne, The Manxman, and Blackmail.

Each film has been restored by the BFI National Archives. The feature documentary I Am Alfred Hitchcock is also included.

The 10-disc set is housed in hardbox packaging. Limited to 1,500, it costs $150.30.

Disc 1 – The Pleasure Garden (1925):

A selfish London chorus girl’s relentless pursuit of pleasure leads to a point where it nearly causes her death.

1080p High-definition presentation on Blu-ray Solo Piano Score by composer Neil Brand (new) Theater Organ Score by Lee Erwin Audio Commentary by editor of the Hitchcock Annual, Sidney Gottlieb (new) Introduction by film historian Charles Barr Interview with BFI silent film...
See full article at bloody-disgusting.com
  • 6/17/2025
  • by Alex DiVincenzo
  • bloody-disgusting.com
On This Day 65 Years Ago, Alfred Hitchcock Released His Best Movie That Became Every Millennial’s Nightmare
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Alfred Hitchcock is easily one of the most influential directors, having defined the suspense genre for decades. The filmmaker had a unique visual style that amplified tension and conflict, resulting in some of the most pathbreaking movies of the time, which eventually became beloved classics.

One such critically acclaimed Hitchcock classic was released on this day 65 years ago. The movie in question left a lasting legacy and continues to inspire a new generation of filmmakers. It is also one of Hitchcock’s best works, and here is what you need to know about its legacy and lasting appeal.

Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho was released 65 years ago on this day

Alfred Hitchcock earned himself the title of “Master of Suspense” with a string of commercially successful movies. However, one of his best works came in 1960 when the filmmaker adapted Robert Bloch’s 1959 novel, Psycho, into a critically acclaimed movie.

Anthony Perkins...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 6/17/2025
  • by Pratik Handore
  • FandomWire
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‘The 39 Steps’ turns 90: How Alfred Hitchcock popularized the iconic ‘MacGuffin’ plot device
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The "MacGuffin" is one of the most famous, most enduring plot devices in all cinema. The term was created by screenwriter Angus McPhail, but it entered the pop culture consciousness via McPhail's early collaborator, Alfred Hitchcock, whose works regularly employed the device.

The filmmaker would later explain the concept to fellow auteur François Truffaut during their legendary 1960s conversations.

The main thing I’ve learned over the years is that the MacGuffin is nothing. I’m convinced of this, but I find it very difficult to prove it to others. My best MacGuffin, and by that I mean the emptiest, the most nonexistent, and the most absurd, is the one we used in North by Northwest. The picture is about espionage, and the only question that’s raised in the story is to find out what the spies are after. Well, during the scene at the Chicago airport, the Central...
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 6/14/2025
  • by Jeff Ewing
  • Gold Derby
Chris Robinson Dies: ‘General Hospital’ Actor Who First Said “I’m Not A Doctor, But I Play One On TV’ Was 86
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Chris Robinson, whose more than 100 TV and film roles were dominated by doctor characters on TV soaps to the extent that the actor appeared in a commercial intoning, “I’m not a doctor, but I play one on TV,” setting off a national catchphrase and late-night TV punchline, died June 9 of heart failure in his sleep at his ranch near Sedona, Arizona. He was 86.

Chris Robinson on ‘General Hospital’ in 1979 ABC Photo Archives via Getty Images

His death was announced on social media by his friend and colleague Mj Allen.

With a prolific career that included a series-regular role on the 1960s ABC war drama 12 O’Clock High and a prominent role in the 1962 Burt Lancaster classic Birdman of Alcatraz, Robinson would come to be known to a large TV audience as Dr. Rick Webber on ABC’s General Hospital. He played the role from 1978-86, with Dr. Webber entered...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 6/11/2025
  • by Greg Evans
  • Deadline Film + TV
The Brooklyn Nine-Nine Character You Likely Forgot Reacher's Alan Ritchson Played
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When people talk about Alan Ritchson they usually talk about his muscles or his fight scenes, but they don't talk about his sheer comedic presence. He first made his name as Thad in "Blue Mountain State," a character whose high-pitched scream I can still hear any time I close my eyes. Thad was the standout character on that show, and it was a performance that led to Ritchson getting cast for one-off roles on sitcoms like "New Girl," "Workaholics," and the only funny episode of "Black Mirror" season 3. But Ritchson's greatest sitcom role was his brief appearance in "Brooklyn Nine-Nine," playing a character nobody saw coming.

The episode was season 6's "Hitchcock & Scully," which opens up with an intense flashback to 1980s New York City. Two suave young detectives beat up a couple of bad guys, save a damsel in distress, and look damn good doing it. After finishing up...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 6/10/2025
  • by Michael Boyle
  • Slash Film
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Kim Novak to Receive Venice Film Festival Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement
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Legendary Hollywood actress Kim Novak (Vertigo, Picnic, Bell, Book and Candle) will be awarded the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival of La Biennale di Venezia (Aug. 27–Sept. 6).

Venice also unveiled that the documentary Kim Novak’s Vertigo by Alexandre Philippe, “made in exclusive collaboration with the actress,” will be presented in its world premiere during the festival.

The decision about the honor was made by the board of directors of La Biennale, based on the recommendation of the artistic director of the festival, Alberto Barbera, organizers said Monday.

“I am deeply, deeply touched to receive the prestigious Golden Lion Award from such an enormously respected film festival,” said Novak. “To be recognized for my body of work at this time in my life is a dream come true. I will treasure every moment I spend in Venice. It will fill my heart with joy.
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 6/9/2025
  • by Georg Szalai
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Kim Novak To Receive Venice Film Festival’s Golden Lion For Lifetime Achievement
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Kim Novak is to receive the Venice Film Festival’s Golden Lion for lifetime achievement.

The festival, which runs August 27-September 6, also will screen the world premiere of documentary Kim Novak’s Vertigo by Alexandre Philippe, made in collaboration with the legendary American actress.

Known for movies including Vertigo, Picnic, and Bell Book and Candle, Novak said today: “I am deeply, deeply touched to receive the prestigious Golden Lion Award from such an enormously respected film festival. To be recognized for my body of work at this time in my life is a dream come true. I will treasure every moment I spend in Venice. It will fill my heart with joy.”

Venice’s Artistic Director Alberto Barbera declared: “Inadvertently becoming a screen legend, Kim Novak was one of the most beloved icons of an entire era of Hollywood films, from her auspicious debut during the mid-1950s until her...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 6/9/2025
  • by Andreas Wiseman
  • Deadline Film + TV
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